Scott St. disruptions begin Friday as city prepares for Transitway shutdown - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 06:00 AM | Calgary | -1.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Scott St. disruptions begin Friday as city prepares for Transitway shutdown

The city needs to repair a century-old sewer line running under Scott Street before it begins diverting buses off the Transitway on Jan. 17.

City needs to repair sewer line before OC Transpo buses diverted Jan. 17

An OC Transpo bus runs along Scott Street. Major changes will be coming to the street starting Jan. 8 as the city prepares for the next stage of construction on its light rail line. (Trevor Pritchard/CBC)

Pedestrians, cyclists and motorists who use Scott Street will see traffic disruptionsin the coming daysas the City of Ottawa prepares to embark on the next stage of itslight rail project.

On Jan. 8, crews will begin rehabilitating a "critical sewer line" that runs underneath Scott Street and is more than 100 years old, the city said in a release Thursday.

The work needs to be completed before Jan. 17, when OCTranspobuses will be diverted from theTransitwayonto Scott Street to make way for the construction of the Confederation Line, the city said.

Road, pathway reductions

That timelinemeans that, starting Friday, the multi-use pathway that runsalong the north side of Scott Street will be down to one lane at Merton Street.

Then, on Jan. 11 at 5 p.m.,Scott Street itself will be reduced to one lanein each direction. There will also be no access to Scott at Garland Street, the city said.

The city says the closures are expected to last one week.

Thousands of buses to be diverted

Thousands of buses are expected to be diverted each day onto Scott and Albert streets oncethe city shuts down the Transitwaybetween Merton Street and Empress Avenue on Jan. 17 during the construction of the Confederation Line.

The bus diversion plan has been criticized by nearby residentswho say the changes will increase noise levels and compromise safety, particularly for cyclists and pedestrians.

The Confederation Line project is expected to be completed by 2018.